16-08-2011, 07:04 AM
The Straits Times
Aug 16, 2011
Call for Sunshine Empire trio to get stiffer sentences
Firm was an elaborate fraud on a large scale, argue prosecutors at High Court
By Selina Lum
PROSECUTORS yesterday pushed for heavier punishments for the trio involved in the Sunshine Empire case.
They are appealing at the High Court against the sentences handed down last year to James Phang Wah, his wife Neo Kuon Huay and Jackie Hoo Choon Cheat.
Sunshine Empire was a multi-level marketing company which sold 'lifestyle packages' to people who took part in the scheme.
The court heard that they were promised high returns, but the returns were paid out not using genuine profits but by recycling funds from new participants.
The prosecution argued that Phang, the 51-year-old founder of the company, should have his nine-year jail term increased to nearly 14 years.
And Hoo, a 31-year-old former company director given a seven-year jail term for collaborating with Phang, should have his sentence raised proportionately.
Neo, 48, was fined $60,000 for falsifying payment vouchers with her husband. The prosecution argued that she should be sent to jail for six months.
The trio are appealing against their convictions. Phang and Hoo are appealing against their sentences.
Yesterday, Mr Subhas Anandan, the lawyer representing Phang and Neo, argued that Sunshine Empire was not a fly-by-night company and there was enough evidence to show that it was a sustainable business.
He said it had collected millions of dollars without a single member of the scheme making a complaint.
There were no victims, he argued, and the police were relying only on the evidence of their expert witness, who said this business model would not be sustainable for more than five years.
Hoo's lawyer Philip Fong said Sunshine Empire was not a Ponzi scheme, which promises high returns and uses money from new investors to pay old investors.
Mr Fong argued that it was was a multi-level marketing company, not an investment scheme, and did not promise guaranteed returns.
But Deputy Public Prosecutor Aedit Abdullah argued for a deterrent sentence, saying it was an elaborate fraud on a large scale that had the trappings of a legitimate enterprise.
Phang received US$5 million (S$6 million) from the scheme in consultancy fees and, while Hoo did not get any direct consultancy fees, the DPP argued that both were intimately involved in the scheme.
selinal@sph.com.sg
Aug 16, 2011
Call for Sunshine Empire trio to get stiffer sentences
Firm was an elaborate fraud on a large scale, argue prosecutors at High Court
By Selina Lum
PROSECUTORS yesterday pushed for heavier punishments for the trio involved in the Sunshine Empire case.
They are appealing at the High Court against the sentences handed down last year to James Phang Wah, his wife Neo Kuon Huay and Jackie Hoo Choon Cheat.
Sunshine Empire was a multi-level marketing company which sold 'lifestyle packages' to people who took part in the scheme.
The court heard that they were promised high returns, but the returns were paid out not using genuine profits but by recycling funds from new participants.
The prosecution argued that Phang, the 51-year-old founder of the company, should have his nine-year jail term increased to nearly 14 years.
And Hoo, a 31-year-old former company director given a seven-year jail term for collaborating with Phang, should have his sentence raised proportionately.
Neo, 48, was fined $60,000 for falsifying payment vouchers with her husband. The prosecution argued that she should be sent to jail for six months.
The trio are appealing against their convictions. Phang and Hoo are appealing against their sentences.
Yesterday, Mr Subhas Anandan, the lawyer representing Phang and Neo, argued that Sunshine Empire was not a fly-by-night company and there was enough evidence to show that it was a sustainable business.
He said it had collected millions of dollars without a single member of the scheme making a complaint.
There were no victims, he argued, and the police were relying only on the evidence of their expert witness, who said this business model would not be sustainable for more than five years.
Hoo's lawyer Philip Fong said Sunshine Empire was not a Ponzi scheme, which promises high returns and uses money from new investors to pay old investors.
Mr Fong argued that it was was a multi-level marketing company, not an investment scheme, and did not promise guaranteed returns.
But Deputy Public Prosecutor Aedit Abdullah argued for a deterrent sentence, saying it was an elaborate fraud on a large scale that had the trappings of a legitimate enterprise.
Phang received US$5 million (S$6 million) from the scheme in consultancy fees and, while Hoo did not get any direct consultancy fees, the DPP argued that both were intimately involved in the scheme.
selinal@sph.com.sg
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